What do you think "apt" means? — Banno
"The cat is on the mat" can be given a truth value, and hence counts as a proposition. — Banno
Isn't it apt to be true, or perhaps false? Couldn't it be true, or perhaps false, in suitable circumstances? — Banno
The blob is still a form and generates content for Bob. — Nils Loc
The old war still rages, — Srap Tasmaner
In The Origin of the Work of Art, Heidegger critiques the idea that form and content can be treated separately, as though form were something imposed on a thing, or content were ‘beyond’ form and style. — Joshs
I can only say that form is mind-dependent, and I agree with you. — javi2541997
Why is this a curious question for you? — I like sushi
The idea that thought is inherently forceful can only become an insight if it is concretely shown how that idea is compatible with the fact that embedded thoughts and dependent acts of thinking must do without a force of their own. If thoughts as such are tied to some force or other, while embedded thoughts (e. g. p qua part of not-p) do not directly come along with a force of their own, it must be clarified how the indirect connection to force, which embedded thoughts must indeed come along with, is to be understood. That is, it must be clarified how dependent logical acts that have an embedded thought as their content, and the overarching logical act that does indeed bear a force of its own interlock with each other such as to provide for the unity of a propositionally complex thought." — Pierre-Normand
If I judge P true, and so do you, aren't we making something we'd want to call "the same judgment"? — Srap Tasmaner
My premise lies rooted in the encounter between agent intellect (subjectivity) and intelligibility (objectivity). This encounter plays in real space as the form/substance interweave. — ucarr
Bob received a blob of clay. What he ordered but didn't receive was the work required to turn that clay into a statue as well as the artists skill and vision. — T Clark
I don't think the statue is really attached to the clay in terms of form and content. Although it is true that Bob went to a potter, a statue can be made of different material, such as marble or gold. — javi2541997
What is wanted? — Srap Tasmaner
I can say we agree, and I can say what we agree on, without attributing to "what we agree on" independent existence, but instead treating it hylomorphically as an abstract object that is immanent within our agreement. "Our agreement" is another such abstraction. Does it exist independently of our agreeing? — Srap Tasmaner
Do we see from the above that mass and abstraction, like form and content*, are interwoven? — ucarr
The mass of an object, for instance, can be treated as an abstract object, — Srap Tasmaner
as long as you're not saying that agreement is only consensual, then we're on the same page. — J
I like the clarity of this, but doesn't it beg the question? The "other side," so to speak, would say, "A proposition is supposed to be a thing with a truth-value, something we don't merely agree or disagree on, but claim objective reasons for doing so." — J
I start to think that frank might be working at the US Fed Res. — javi2541997
Thanks for the info and sticking up for the little guy. — BitconnectCarlos
Your contribution is appreciated. — BitconnectCarlos
Maybe I misunderstand you but I don't see the distinction between a thought being merely entertained (or grasped) and it being asserted to line up with the distinction between (merely) formal and natural languages. — Pierre-Normand
Ascriptions of semantic content to the responses of LLM-based AI agents, and interpreting them as having assertoric force, is a matter of taking a high-level intentional stance on their linguistic behavior with a view of rationalizing it. — Pierre-Normand
it also is liable to send us off into tangential directions regarding the specific nature of current LLM-based AI agents, the issue of their autonomy (or lack thereof), their lack of embodiment (and the issue of the empirical grounding of their symbols), how they are being individuated (as machines, algorithms or virtual agents in specific conversation instances), to what extend their assertions have deontic statuses (in the form of commitments and entitlements to claims), and so on. — Pierre-Normand
In analyzing a situation or a historical comparison, power dynamics are important to me as are the fundamental nature of the parties involved & their aims. — BitconnectCarlos
If, for example, propositional thinking is said to be part of the human animal, that needs to be explained. — schopenhauer1
Frank is just trying to uphold his idea that in "real life" we don't talk about unasserted declarative sentences, without actually going through the work of defending it. — Leontiskos
Why would that not be ontological? You are literally discussing someone's understanding of what an object is. — schopenhauer1
